JUDGE DEL PESCO PREPARES TO HANG UP HER ROBE

By Celia Cohen
Grapevine Political Writer

After 20 years on the bench, Judge Susan Del Pesco is
about ready to end a trailblazing public career that
made her the first woman on the Superior Court. She told
her colleagues last week she intends to retire in May.

Del Pesco's departure will create a Republican
opening among the 19 judges on Delaware's largest civil
and criminal court in keeping with a requirement in the
state constitution for a politically balanced judiciary.

Her replacement must be nominated by Gov. Ruth Ann
Minner, a two-term Democrat who has been notified
informally of the upcoming vacancy, and confirmed by the
state Senate, where the Democrats are in charge there,
too.

"I'm very grateful to have been a judge. It was a
good way to spend 20 years," Del Peso said Friday.

The judgeship capped a pioneering path for Del Pesco,
one that someday may seem almost quaint in light of this
new day in which a woman is a powerful contender for the
presidential nomination of a major political party.

Del Pesco was the first woman to become the president
of the Delaware State Bar Association in 1987 when she
was a partner at the Wilmington firm now known as
Prickett Jones & Elliott, and she became the first woman
on the Superior Court the next year when she was
appointed to it by Gov. Mike Castle, now the Republican
congressman.

Del Pesco today is second in seniority on the court
to Judge John Babiarz Jr., and there are five women who
are Superior Court judges.

"Susan is an individual who combined great expertise
in the law with a real feel for the Delaware community,
and I think they are excellent combined qualities for a
judge," Castle said. "I think she'll be hard to
replace."

President Judge James T. Vaughn Jr. said the court
will honor Del Pesco at a ceremony that is in the
planning stages.

"Judge Del Pesco has served with honor and
distinction. As the first woman appointed to the court,
she has set the example for other women judges and
lawyers to follow. She will be missed by her fellow
judges, but we wish her well as she moves on," Vaughn
said.

Del Pesco got her start in the law at the state's
best-known little firm that no longer exists. More than
a quarter-century after its demise, the political and
legal legacy of Schnee & Castle lives on.

The partnership was dissolved to avoid possible
conflicts after Castle was elected lieutenant governor
in 1980 on his way to stardom in Delaware's political
firmament. Carl Schnee, a much better lawyer than a
politician, had a short stint as the U.S. attorney for
Delaware and also ran for attorney general as a
Democrat.

Del Pesco was not the firm's only associate. So was
Dennis Spivack, a Democrat who has been pouting since an
ill-fated candidacy two years ago that Castle is the
congressman and he is not.